Lowe tosses eight scoreless as Braves down Phillies

Apr 6, 2009 - 4:37 AM
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- If Derek Lowe had been this dominant last
October, the Philadelphia Phillies might not be World Series
champions.

Lowe pitched eight superb innings, three Braves homered off
Brett Myers, and Atlanta beat the defending champs 4-1 in the
major league opener Sunday night.

Lowe (1-0) allowed two hits, no walks, struck out four and the
sinkerballer got 13 groundouts. Mike Gonzalez pitched out of
trouble in the ninth to secure the win.

The Phillies had better luck against Lowe when he pitched for
Los Angeles in the NL championship series. They beat him in Game
1 of the NLCS and he had a no-decision in the Dodgers' loss in
Game 4.

"Having just played them, it was easy to watch video to see what
you did last time," Lowe said. "They're an extremely good
hitting team. I was able to get ahead in the count. I just
wanted to be consistent."

Brian McCann hit a two-run homer, Jeff Francoeur had a solo shot
and Jordan Schafer went deep in his first career at-bat for the
Braves.

Once Lowe came out, the Phillies rallied. Pinch-hitter Eric
Bruntlett started the ninth with a double and scored on Jayson
Werth's one-out RBI single. After Gonzalez walked Chase Utley to
bring up the tying run, the hard-throwing lefty struck out Ryan
Howard looking and Raul Ibanez swinging to end it.

"He was awesome," Braves manager Bobby Cox said of Lowe. "He
really knows how to pitch."

Atlanta gave Lowe a $60 million, four-year contract to anchor
its revamped rotation, and the 35-year-old right-hander pitched
like an ace in his debut with his new team. He gave the Braves
the type of masterful effort they used to get from Greg Maddux,
John Smoltz, Tom Glavine and Tim Hudson.

"It's nice to get Derek Lowe a win," McCann said. "He had great
stuff. It's a lot better to catch him than hit against him."

Myers (0-1) filled in for Cole Hamels, whose first start was
pushed back because of minor elbow problems. Hamels, the NLCS
and World Series MVP, is expected to pitch at Colorado on
Friday.

The Phillies celebrated the franchise's second World Series
title during an hour-long ceremony before the game. Led by the
Phanatic and veteran pitcher Jamie Moyer, players entered the
field from Ashburn Alley behind the stands in left-center field.
They walked past adoring fans in the aisles, down stairs and
onto a red carpet that stretched from the warning track to the
infield.

Then manager Charlie Manuel raised the 2008 championship flag on
the concourse behind the brick batter's eye. After a giant
American flag was unfurled in the outfield, players were
introduced to rousing ovations. Fans who used to boo Manuel
lustily chanted "Charlie, Charlie" when the lovable skipper
jogged out.

Even their uniforms had a special look only for this game. All
the red lettering and numbers were trimmed in gold.

The festive crowd of 44,532 had barely settled into the seats by
the time the Braves jumped ahead. Making his third straight
opening-day start, Myers retired the first two batters before
Chipper Jones lined a single to left. McCann followed with a
shot that reached the second deck in right field.

A smattering of boos were heard while McCann circled the bases.
It wouldn't be Philly without some jeers. Myers got an earful a
bit later, too.

"That's part of it. We can handle it," Manuel said. "A lot of
people were here. They wanted to see a good game. We got off to
a slow start."

Francoeur led off the second with a liner into the seats in
left. One batter later, Schafer drove one out to center. The
rookie center fielder became the fifth Atlanta player to homer
in his debut and first since Francoeur did it in 2005.

"It was a great feeling," Schafer said. "As soon as I hit it, I
thought, 'Oh Wow.'"

Myers settled in after that inning. He allowed four runs and
eight hits, striking out six in six innings. Coming off a
down-and-up season in which he was briefly demoted to the
minors, the 28-year-old right-hander has plenty riding on his
performance because he's in the final season of a $25.75
million, three-year contract.

"I made three mistakes and they didn't miss them," Myers said.
"Sometimes they pop those up. Not in this case. Give them
credit."

The Phillies are favorites to win their third straight NL East
title mainly because they have nearly the same team that went
11-3 against Milwaukee, Los Angeles and Tampa Bay in the
postseason.

But Philadelphia's star-studded offense sputtered in the opener.
Jimmy Rollins, Utley and Howard combined to go 1-for-11 with two
strikeouts.

"Derek Lowe's a tough guy to hit. He was on his game," Howard
said. "He's a groundball pitcher. I don't know if he has a
magnet in there to keep it down or whatever. Give him credit."

NLAT PHILADELPHIA - SCORING UPDATESOLO HOME RUN BY JEFF FRANCOEUR (1) TO LEFT WITH 0 OUT IN THE 2ND OFF BRETT MYERS.CURRENT SCORE: ATLANTA 3, PHILADELPHIA 0DUE UP FOR ATLANTA: C KOTCHMAN (.000, 0 HR, 0 RBI)